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Only a few bad apples huh?...Bad Cops Thread

He got suspended without pay.......hope his bitchass get fired and she sues the city

 
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https://www.reviewjournal.com/crime...ith-case-against-ex-las-vegas-police-officer/

DA will not proceed with case against ex-Las Vegas police officer


The Clark County district attorney’s office announced Wednesday that it will stop pursuing criminal charges against a former Las Vegas police officer in the 2017 death of an unarmed man on the Strip.

Last week, a grand jury decided not to indict former Metropolitan Police Department officer Kenneth Lopera in the death of 40-year-old Tashii Brown. District Attorney Steve Wolfson’s office charged Lopera last year with involuntary manslaughter and oppression under color of office before the case was referred to a grand jury in March.

“I thank Steve Wolfson for doing the right thing,” said Steve Grammas, president of the union that represents Metro’s rank-and-file officers, after Wednesday’s announcement. The union represented Lopera during the criminal case.

After news broke last week of the decision not to indict, Wolfson told the Las Vegas Review-Journal that his office was “exploring further options.”

Brown’s mother continues to pursue a federal lawsuit over his death.

“As the mother of yet another innocent person killed by a Metro officer, Trinita Farmer is aware of the long history of the DA’s office to refuse to put on a public preliminary hearing in Las Vegas killer-cop cases,” the woman’s attorney, Andre Lagomarsino, said in a statement Wednesday.

According to the statement earlier in the day from the district attorney’s office, prosecutors are requesting a public review of evidence in the case. The hearing is expected to happen within 60 days, according to the statement. Such hearings are routinely held when police kill someone.

“A fact finding review is a half measure designed to placate the public,” Lagomarsino’s statement said. “Trinita remains shocked and traumatized by the way her son Tashii was so brutally killed by Metro Officer Kenneth Lopera. She looks forward to a complete presentation of the case in United States District Court.”

Longtime Nevada civil rights advocate Gary Peck said the district attorney’s office has long resisted criminal justice reform, and part of that legacy is a refusal to take “political heat” by holding police officers accountable for bad behavior.

“For those of us who believe that our justice system should be fair, unbiased and transparent, this utterly predictable affair has been dispiriting,” Peck said Wednesday.

Wolfson could not be reached for comment on the decision to drop the prosecution, but according to the statement from his office, a grand jury listened “to many hours of testimony over several days from numerous witnesses.”

“Considering the fact that a Grand Jury did not find slight or marginal evidence to support a criminal charge, it is highly improbable that a crime could be established beyond a reasonable doubt.

“Prosecutors are guided by rules of ethics. One such rule provides that a prosecutor shall not proceed with a prosecution if, in good faith, there is a belief that a charge could not be proven beyond a reasonable doubt,” according to the statement.

Brown approached Lopera inside The Venetian on May 14, 2017, before taking off down an employee-only hallway. Body camera footage showed Lopera chasing Brown and eventually catching up to him outside, where the officer suspected he was trying to steal a truck.

Lopera shocked Brown with a Taser seven times, punched him in the head repeatedly, and placed him in a chokehold for more than a minute.

Brown died of asphyxia due to police restraint, the Clark County coroner’s office said. An enlarged heart and methamphetamine use contributed to his death, the coroner’s office said. His death was ruled a homicide.

Lopera, then 31, was arrested after the encounter and retired from the police force. Brown would not have faced charges if he had survived, police said.

The officer’s defense argued that Brown’s drug use and enlarged heart, coupled with the totality of the event, caused his death.

A hearing in the criminal case is scheduled for Thursday morning.
 
http://www.startribune.com/aclu-pus...bout-fatal-st-paul-police-shooting/490159731/

Family of man shot and killed by St. Paul police demand bodycam footage

At a vigil, family members identified the man killed by St. Paul police Sunday.

The family of a man shot and killed by St. Paul police demanded the release of police bodycam footage, data from 911 calls and a third-party investigation of Sunday’s early morning shooting.

“Through our grief and difficulty, we have been left with more questions than answers as to why police officers decided to abruptly and violently take Billy’s life,” Dannah Thompson said at Monday night’s vigil at the Minneapolis American Indian Center.

The relatives and Thompson identified the victim as her cousin, William “Billy” Hughes, 45, a member of the White Earth Nation.

This isn’t the first time the family has faced tragedy, Thompson said. Philip Quinn, a cousin of Hughes, was fatally shot by St. Paul police in 2015.

“When is it going to stop?” Kathy Ficken, the aunt of Hughes and Quinn, said tearfully while holding a sign with photos of her two nephews.

About 60 people gathered with the family at the center to remember Hughes, then protested for an end to police shootings. Many called upon state and local lawmakers to change law enforcement policies.

The crowd, which included Native Lives Matter, Natives Against Heroin and Black Lives Matter, blocked traffic on E. Franklin Avenue while they chanted, “We want justice,” and waved signs.

Family members burned incense for Hughes, and others played a song in his honor, beating a drum and singing. “Our community experienced a terrible tragedy,” Thompson said, describing her cousin as beloved.

Authorities have shared few details more than a day after St. Paul police fatally shot Hughes in the city’s Summit-University neighborhood Sunday. Authorities did not release his name on Monday.

On Sunday, St. Paul police said the case has been turned over to the Bureau of Criminal Apprehension. BCA spokeswoman Jill Oliveira said late Monday morning that her agency “will release additional details — including the officers’ names — once the initial round of interviews is completed.”

Residents on the 900 block of St. Anthony Avenue were grappling with the shooting Monday. Mary Pinales said she was asleep early Sunday when the sound of gunfire woke her up. Soon, about a half-dozen officers wearing protective vests and carrying guns ordered her out of her apartment.

“I was lost and confused,” Pinales said.

She made her way downstairs through a second-floor apartment unit and then to the first floor, where she saw the body of the victim, who lived on the second-floor, on the enclosed porch at the foot of the stairs.

“I just feel sad for whatever happened to him,” she said, “and lost because I don’t really know what happened.”

Pinales and another neighbor, who was awake when the shooting occurred, said they didn’t hear any gunshots from the second floor where the man had lived. The first shots they heard, both women said, sounded as if they came from the porch. Pinales said she could not recall seeing a weapon on or near the man’s body. Pinales said that although she had been asleep, she is confident she would have heard any shots fired in the unit below her.

Police have said that officers were dispatched to the multiunit building for a call about shots being fired in an apartment. They arrived about 2:30 a.m. and two officers shot an armed man, police said.

According to emergency dispatch audio, the dispatcher said a caller reported multiple shots being fired on the second floor before hanging up. The dispatcher was unable to reach the caller for more information.

Pinales said the man, whose name she did not know, moved in about five months ago. She knew little else about him, but said he was a quiet person who performed maintenance work on the property.

The American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) of Minnesota called for the immediate release of the identities of the man who was killed and the officers involved. The organization accused the BCA of failing to keep the public informed about the shooting in a timely manner.

The officers were wearing body cameras that were activated, and the footage has been turned over to the BCA. The officers involved are on standard paid administrative leave.
 
https://www.cbsnews.com/news/11-year-old-taser-cincinnati-police-girl-stealing-kroger-market/

Cincinnati police: 11-year-old girl stealing from Kroger market shocked with Taser

CINCINNATI -- An 11-year-old girl who Cincinnati police say was stealing from a supermarket has been shocked with a Taser stun gun. Police say the incident happened around 9:30 p.m. Monday at a Kroger in Cincinnati.

Authorities say the officer suspected the girl was using a backpack to shoplift when he approached her. Police say the girl resisted and fled before she was shocked.

The girl was then taken to Cincinnati Children's Hospital for evaluation and was released into a guardian's custody, CBS affiliate WKRC-TV reports.

Police have charged the girl with theft and obstruction of justice. She will appear in juvenile court, however a date wasn't immediately announced.

Cincinnati Police Chief Eliot Isaac has opened an investigation. According to the department's policy, Tasers can be used on people who are at least 7 years old.

"We are extremely concerned when force is used by one of our officers on a child of this age," Isaac said in a statement. "As a result we will be taking a very thorough review of our policies as it relates to using force on juveniles as well as the propriety of the officers actions."

Vice Mayor Christopher Smitherman says there should be a "complete investigation."

The officer involved has been placed on restricted duty, WKRC-TV reports, pending an outcome of that investigation.
 
https://www.businessinsider.com/r-police-involved-deaths-vary-by-race-and-place-2018-7?r=UK&IR=T

Police-involved deaths vary by race and place
Reuters
By Carolyn Crist

(Reuters Health) - Black and Latino men are twice as likely as white men to die during interactions with police, according to a new study.

Police-involved fatalities in the U.S. average nearly three deaths per day, researchers write in the American Journal of Public Health.

"Based on what we see in the media and the sheer volume of deaths we've seen covered in the last five years, this is a common event but the official data is woefully inadequate," said study leader Frank Edwards of Cornell University in Ithaca, New York.

Criminal justice data, which is primarily collected through the Bureau of Justice Statistics' Arrest-Deaths program or the Federal Bureau of Investigation's Supplementary Homicide Report, relies on voluntary reporting by police departments and often has limited geographic coverage, he said.

"Research on policing in the U.S. is often focused on New York, Chicago or L.A., but it's important to direct our attention to the tremendous volume happening outside of big cities," Edwards told Reuters Health by phone. "We wanted to draw attention to the link between race, place and the risk of death."

Edwards and colleagues analyzed data from Fatal Encounters, a public site that aims to document all episodes of fatal police-civilian interactions in the U.S. (https://www.fatalencounters.org/) It includes homicides, suicides and accidental deaths, and all cases are fact-checked against published accounts before being added to the public data set. The site is run by D. Brian Burghart, a former editor and publisher of the Reno News and Review and a journalism instructor at the University of Nevada in Reno.

The research team looked at the 6,296 police-involved homicides with adult male victims recorded on Fatal Encounters between 2012-2018, focusing on cases where the cause of death was asphyxiation, beating, a chemical agent, a medical emergency, a taser or a gunshot. They didn't include deaths from falls, drowning, drug overdoses, stabbings, fire or undetermined status. They then calculated county-level estimates of police-involved deaths by race/ethnicity, region and urban-rural types.

They found an average of 1,028 deaths per year, or 2.8 deaths per day. Overall, police were involved in 8 percent of U.S. homicides of adult males. During the six-year study period, black men were killed by police at a rate of 2.1 per 100,000 people, Latino men were killed at a rate of 1 per 100,000 and white men were killed at a rate of 0.6 men per 100,000.

On average, rates of police-involved fatalities were highest in large metropolitan areas and lowest in suburban areas. By region, the Mountain states - Montana, Idaho, Wyoming, Nevada, Utah, Colorado, Arizona and New Mexico - had the highest rate of police-involved homicides across the population, at 17 percent The Middle Atlantic states - New Jersey, New York and Pennsylvania - had the lowest rate, at 5 percent.

"We knew the numbers would be high, but this is higher than what we expected," Edwards said.

A limitation of the study is that Fatal Encounters depends on public records and media reports, so cases are likely missing if they weren't reported by news outlets, particularly in places that don't have media coverage or don't publish online.

Edwards and colleagues are studying additional racial groups, particularly Native Americans and Asians, as well as gender and age. For instance, Native American men and women seem to have much higher risks of death in encounters with police. The research team is also interested in the social, political and economic environments that may boost warrants and traffic stops in small communities.

"History is relevant. We should always ask the questions: How have our laws (and law enforcement) historically worked against people of color? Why do we allow these patterns to continue to reproduce?" said Sirry Alang of Lehigh University in Bethlehem, Pennsylvania, who wrote an editorial that was published with the study.

Alang, who wasn't involved with this study, has researched police brutality and poor health outcomes among black men and women, including arrests.

"Police-involved deaths are place-based just as policies are place-based," she told Reuters Health by email. "Structural racism in the form of policies that lead to racial residential segregation, for example, increase disproportionately fatal policing of people of color."

"It is not just about race/ethnicity. It is also about where you live, work, play and age as a black or Latinx person that puts you at risk of being killed by the police," Alang said. "This does not surprise black and Latinx people in the United States. We have always tried to figure out where is safe for people who look like us, where we are less likely to get discriminated against, hassled, or killed simply because of the color of our skin."
 


http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/local/breaking/ct-met-maurice-granton-autopsy-20180807-story.html

Autopsy shows man shot and killed by Chicago police was hit in the back


A South Side man fatally shot by a Chicago police officer in June died from a single gunshot wound to the back that penetrated his spine and lungs, according to autopsy results released on Tuesday.

The findings come a little more than a week after attorneys for Maurice Granton Jr.’s family filed a lawsuit against the city, claiming officers overreacted when they shot him.

The autopsy by the Cook County medical examiner’s office confirmed claims made by the family’s attorney that Granton, 24, was shot in the back. After piercing the right side of Granton’s back, the bullet penetrated his vertebra and his left lung, according to the report by Stephanie Powers, an assistant Cook County medical examiner who performed the autopsy the morning after Granton’s death.

The bullet traveled through Granton’s torso from right to left and in an upward angle, the report stated. His death was ruled a homicide, meaning his death came at the hands of another person.

A toxicology report found marijuana in Granton’s system at the time of his death.

Chicago police have previously said the Wentworth District tactical officers were in the area conducting a narcotics investigation when they were directed to the 300 block of East 47th Street. Surveillance footage showed Granton and others milling around under the CTA Green Line before a police car pulled up and the men scattered.

Body camera footage, released by the Civilian Office of Police Accountability late last month, captured an officer telling Granton “Come here, man,” and then chasing Granton, who jumped a wooden fence, leaving the view of that officer’s body camera. That officer abandoned the chase, shouting in pain. The view from his camera indicated he was limping away.

But his camera captured the sound of a single gunshot, then a pause, followed by three more shots in quick succession.

The body camera footage posted from the officer who appears to have opened fire did not include audio at the time of the shooting. That video showed Granton running across a vacant lot and darting onto a wrought iron fence with one leg raised. As both hands reached for the top of the fence, the officer can be seen raising his gun. The footage then showed Granton fall from the fence, stumble to his left a few feet and then drop to the ground, writhing in pain.

Granton was taken to an area hospital where he was later pronounced dead.

The suit, filed on behalf of the mother of Granton’s two young children, claimed Granton cannot be seen carrying a gun or other weapon in the bodycam footage, adding that he posed no threat of harm to police or the public.

The case remains under investigation by COPA.
 
http://www.mcall.com/news/breaking/mc-nws-south-whitehall-police-rally-20180809-story.html

Pro-police rally and service for South Whitehall shooting victim scheduled for same time Sunday

A group of police supporters plan to rally Sunday near the spot where South Whitehall Township police officer Jonathan Roselle fatally shot a man two weeks ago.

At the same time, community activists in Allentown will hold an interfaith service to honor the man who died, Joseph Santos of Hasbrouck Heights, N.J., and call for an end to police brutality.

The Facebook group Support Officer Jonathan Roselle and Our Men and Woman in Blue is calling for a peaceful demonstration, not only for Roselle — charged with voluntary homicide in the July 28 shooting of 44-year-old Santos — but on behalf of police generally.


“I’m not a cop, I don’t know what cops go through,” said Corey Fatzinger, 33, of New Tripoli, who first floated the rally idea on Facebook a couple of days ago. “But I can only imagine what they go through in today’s society.”

The rally is scheduled for 2 p.m. on Hamilton Boulevard near the Comfort Inn Suites, where the shooting happened.

The NAACP Allentown Branch said Thursday the planned rally for the police is poorly timed and should be canceled.

In a news release, the NAACP said the rally would be insensitive to the Santos family and provocative to those who seek justice in the shooting.

Make the Road PA and other activist groups that have protested the shooting plan a 2 p.m. event to remember Santos and urge that Roselle be convicted.

That event will be held at Resurrected Life Church, 144 N. Ninth St., Allentown.

According to authorities, Santos had been jumping on moving vehicles along the 3700 block of Hamilton Boulevard when Roselle arrived.

Several videos shared on Facebook moments after the shooting showed Santos walking away from the stopped police car, then reversing course as Roselle shouts repeatedly for him to get on the ground. The video then shows the officer firing five shots.

On Tuesday, Lehigh County District Attorney Jim Martin announced Roselle had been charged with voluntary homicide. He said the officer was not justified in using deadly force, given that Santos was not armed or committing a felony and that deadly force was not necessary to prevent death or secure an arrest.

Roselle chose to use a gun instead of less lethal options at his disposal, notably a baton, pepper spray and Taser — all of which were in working order, Martin said.

Days after the shooting, about 100 people attended a vigil at Hamilton Boulevard and Lincoln Avenue to support the family and demand action to keep police from turning to lethal force in such cases.

The vigil also focused on the racial element of the case. Many protesters said the outcome would have been different had the Latino Santos been white.

Fatzinger said Sunday’s rally “has nothing to do with race. I don’t see color
. I see good people and bad people and everything in between. We don’t want any racists out there, any white power stuff.”

The event is about recognizing that police, dedicated to protecting the public, are often forced to make split-second decisions that could lead to tragedy, he said.

Whoever comes out to support the officer, I don’t want any disrespect shown,” Fatzinger said. “No looting or rioting or property damage. Once people start doing that, our cause goes down the drain.”

A memorial of flowers, candles and other items grew up at the shooting scene in the days that followed. But even some who generally back the police aren’t sure this is an appropriate spot for a pro-police rally.

“I think where you have it in such close proximity to where it happened, it sends a message that is at the very least disrespectful,” said Peter Ramstine of Catasauqua, adding that he is a strong supporter of law enforcement but probably won’t attend the rally.

“I support the idea behind it, but it’s in poor taste,” said Ramstine, who saw the rally on Facebook and posted a comment.

South Whitehall Chief Glen Dorney and Roselle’s lawyer, Gavin Holihan, did not respond to a messages for comment.
 


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Coon cops are some of the worst pigs...
 
https://www.shreveporttimes.com/sto...fter-allegedly-making-racist-posts/987250002/

'Circus monkeies:' Two Natchitoches officers resign after allegedly making racist posts

Two Natchitoches police officer accused of making racists posts on Facebook have resigned, Natchitoches City Attorney Ronald Corkern said Tuesday.

Miranda Mayrand and Ross Desadier are no longer with the department. They previously were on administrative leave.

The investigation centered around comments that Mayrand posted on her Facebook page. The post included a picture of Lebron James and Colin Kaepernick stating that Kaepernick used sports to divide the country.

Screenshotted portions of the post were provided to The Times by social media users. City attorney Corkern confirmed the investigation stemmed from those posts.

Kaepernick, a former quarterback for the San Francisco 49ers who last played during the 2016 season, knelt during the National Anthem before the start of NFL games to protest police brutality and social injustice.

"LeBron James says Trump is using sports to divide the country," the post reads. "Wrong LeBron! It was Colin Kaepernick who used sports to divide the country."

Brant Mcmanus, a person whose relationship with the officers is unknown, commented on Mayrand's post, seemingly referring to black athletes who kneel as "circus monkeies (sic)."

"I want the f****** to kneel," he said. It's a sign (of) submission. Kneel before your MASTER!! F****** circus monkeies (sic)." Mcmanus' comment had one "like." It is unclear who liked his comment.


Desadier appears to have commented in support of Mcmanus' statement on the post.

"Think you know where I stand Little Sister," he wrote to Mayrand. "Sounds like Me & Brant need to be introduced." Desadier ended his comment with a thumbs-up emoji.

Desadier and Mayrand have no right to appeal because they resigned, Corkern said.
 
http://www.capradio.org/articles/20...-mcintyre-in-may-2017-inspector-general-says/

Sacramento Deputies Fired ‘Excessive’ Rounds During Fatal Shooting Of Mikel McIntyre In May 2017, Inspector General Says

Sacramento County deputies fired an “excessive” and “unnecessary” number of rounds during the fatal shooting of Mikel McIntyre in May of last year, according to new findings by the inspector general.

The report also states that deputies put the general public “at risk” when they shot at McIntyre 18 times near Highway 50, and when they fired additional rounds in a Rancho Cordova parking lot.

The 32-year-old black man was fleeing on the freeway’s shoulder when he was struck seven times and killed.

The report is scheduled to be released on Thursday, but CapRadio independently obtained a copy and confirmed the authenticity of a version published by The Sacramento Bee.

The inspector general, who is retired Sacramento Police Chief Rick Braziel, recommends that deputies receive additional training on less-lethal force options.

According to the report, a family member reported McIntyre to law enforcement for “combative” behavior on the afternoon of May 8, 2017, and again later that evening, when he allegedly assaulted his mother in the parking lot of a Ross clothing store.

A deputy arrived on the scene and chased McIntyre through the parking lot. After tripping and falling, witnesses say McIntyre assaulted the deputy in the head with a rock.

The “dazed” deputy stood and fired two rounds at McIntyre as he fled toward a Hooters restaurant.

Additional deputies eventually arrived and followed McIntyre onto a freeway on-ramp and onto Highway 50, where he was killed.

The report says that deputies fired two dozen rounds at McIntyre during the pursuit, which lasted seven minutes.

In his recommendations, Braziel says that despite the “chaos” of the chase, the deputies’ “ability to make sound and reasonable decisions is essential.”

A statement by Sheriff Scott Jones, which was given to CapRadio in response to the Sacramento Bee article, questioned Braziel’s credentials to investigate the shooting.

“The opinion of the Inspector General is just that, a lay opinion, based on his own personal context and experience,” Jones wrote. “It is not, and cannot be, a legal opinion or conclusion like it appears to purport.”

Jones also criticized Supervisor Phil Serna, who told that Bee that he would be watching the sheriff “very carefully” to see if he would discipline his deputies.

“It is highly unusual, suspect, and in fact unprecedented for a Supervisor to ... collude with the media and others for personal political reasons, while recklessly placing the County—and the pursuit of truth—at risk,” Jones wrote.

McIntyre family attorney John Burris commended Braziel for issuing the report and hoped District Attorney Anne Marie Schubert would file charges against the two deputies who fired the shots that killed McIntyre.

“I don’t hold my breath on it,” Burris added. “I don’t think they have that kind of courage, with the symbiotic relationship between the district attorney’s office and the police. I have no reason to believe they will prosecute given they haven’t prosecuted in other cases which have been equally egregious.”


Burris argued that “everyone was aware that [McIntyre] had mental problems and, as a consequence of that, efforts should have been made to de-escalate the situation, and to try to catch up with him at a time, other than shoot him down like a mad dog."
 
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